Listed Building: Church of All Saints (1294226)

Please read our .

Grade I
NHLE UID 1294226
Date assigned 28 May 1954
Date last amended

Description

Church. Late C10, early and late C12, C13 and C14, restored mid C19. Coursed rubble and squared coursed limestone and lias with ashlar dressings and lead roof. Aisled nave, chancel, south porch and west tower. South elevation of chancel of 3-window range of C14 two-light windows, 2 to left have square heads and other has segmental head. C12 south door has round-arched head and low side lancet to left. Steep gabled roof with ashlar parapets and finials. East window is a C13 triple lancet with shafts between. North elevation of chancel has central projecting vestry with 3-light north window under segmental arch head. 2-light square head window to right and single lancet to left. South aisle of 3-window range of 2-light Decorated windows with reticulated tracery and ogee heads with uncarved finial blocks. Similar 2- and 3-light east and west windows. Lean-to roof with ashlar parapet. Porch to left of centre, restored C19, has C14 double-chamfered outer arch with cluster responds. Late C12 inner door has 2 orders of shafts with 2 bands of zig-zag decoration round the arch with centre bands of beak heads. North aisle of 3-window range of 2-light Decorated windows with reticulated tracery. Similar 2- and 3-light east and west windows. Lean-to roof with ashlar gable parapets. Nave clerestory of 4-window range of 2-light square head windows with C19 tracery. Fine C10 west tower of 4 stages, each set back, with long and short work at each corner. West door has capitals and abaci decorated with balnk arcading and moulding around the arch. All faces of the tower are decorated with lesenes which form a pattern of blank arcading to the base of the second stage and intersect diagonally to form a band of diamond shapes at the base of the third stage; the panels between are all rendered. Pair of window openings to south of first stage have shallow arch heads with short colonnettes and cross lights. Remains of similar openings to west face. Second stage has door opening to south and third stage has single-light pointed-head window openings to each face. Narrow five-light arch-head bell-chamber openings to each face of fourth stage have colonnettes between. Several other minor openings are probably C10. Castellated parapet is probably C14. Remains of circular sundial or consecration stone to south face of first stage. Interior: 3-bay nave arcade of double-chamfered arches, those to the south are late C13 with octagonal piers and those to the north are early C14 with 4-shafted piers. C13 triple-chamfered chancel arch has early C12 double-shafted responds. C13 double-chamfered tower arch has late C13 plain responds with many scalloped capitals. Late C12 decoration around the top of the arch was probably reset. Late C12 five and six-bay blank arcading with zig-zag decoration to north and south walls of chancel. Similar triple stepped sedilia to south wall has been altered. C14 recess to left. C19 roof structures. C17 carved panelled pulpit. Perpendicular screen restored and repainted mid C19. C19 font. Monuments: brasses to John Muscote died 1512 and his wife, wall mounted to south of tower arch. 3 early C19 tablets with figures and urn above, to Whitworth family in tower and to south of chancel. Other C19 tablets. Most nave and chancel windows have C19 and early C20 stained glass. The tower is said to date from c.970 and it is suggested that a narrow chancel may have been directly attached as the long and short work is visible to ground level on the east face. (Buildings of England: Northamptonshire, p.195).

Map

Location

Grid reference Centred SP 8519 6381 (39m by 25m)
Civil Parish EARLS BARTON, North Northamptonshire (formerly Wellingborough District)

External Links (1)

Related Monuments/Buildings (1)

Record last edited

May 20 2022 3:09PM

Comments and Feedback

Do you have any questions or more information about this record? Please feel free to comment below with your name and email address. All comments are submitted to the website maintainers for moderation, and we aim to respond/publish as soon as possible. Comments, questions and answers that may be helpful to other users will be retained and displayed along with the name you supply. The email address you supply will never be displayed or shared.